Ruslan YemtsovAmr Moubarak
Social Safety Nets Core Course, May 8, 2018
The role of social safety nets in the context of
subsidy reform and beyond
How countries have used subsidy reforms to
expand and improve safety nets for the poor and
vulnerable?
• Using fiscal space to support expansion of safety nets
• Using political space to support modernization of safety
nets
What resources and tools are available to support
SP practitioners involved in subsidy reform?
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Outline
Why reform energy subsidies?
• Global spending on energy subsidies
amounted to $325 billion in 2015 and
and $260 in 2016 (IEA)
• This is an immense fiscal burden (6.5
% of world GDP)
• It results in over use of fossil fuels
• Diversion of resources away from
social goals: spending on subsidies
exceeds social assistance spending in
over 50 countries.
• Instead fossil fuel energy should be
taxed, and the increases in prices
needed to achieve that are significant
(even with low oil prices)
• Subsidies are regressive
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Source IMF
0
26,000
52,000
78,000
104,000
130,000
156,000
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
IDR tr
Household consumption decile
IDR per HH per month
Gasoline
Fuel (total)
Kerosene
Source: WB staff calculations based on Susenas February 09 and 2008 APBN
The increase in the cost of living caused by knock-on effects of higher energy prices onto other prices can be substantial• E.g. Results from PSIAs in Morocco the removal of petroleum subsidies would
increase poverty by about 5 percentage points; and in Egypt by 4.5 percentage points (almost 3 million people).
The macroeconomic effects (including on inflation, employment and wages) caused by the shift in energy prices• Even if poor are not consuming much of the energy products, the ripple effect
can be significant (additional 4-5 percentage points inflation)
Economic rationale: The poor and near poor need to be protected otherwise they could fall into the poverty trap.• We need to avoid long term impacts of fuel price adjustment since the poor and
near poor may cut health and education spending as a coping mechanism, undermining future prospects to escaping poverty.
Political rationale: The middle class obviously the losers in the short run. They usually use the poor as “ a scape goat” to block the reform• Well designed compensated package can be use as a counterargument and
exclude this popular issue.
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Need for SSNs in the context of subsidy
removal
• SSN are progressive, energy subsidy are
regressive: the reform channeling subsidies to
expanded safety nets results in better social welfare
outcome and more equal distribution
• Scale of impact of subsidy removal on households
is below typical SSN transfer generosity (10-20% of
consumption for recipients)
=>SSN replacing the subsidy will improve welfare of the poor
and the distribution• Recipients of cash transfers can benefit immediately, even before the shock of price adjustments.
• Cash is easier for beneficiaries when making adjustments in their consumption needs.
• In terms of program implementation, giving cash is more efficient and the distribution costs are cheaper
compared to in-kind forms or services.
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SSN can be used to mitigate the effects
• Existing cash transfers have low coverage
• Existing information systems used by SSNs do not contain data on potential beneficiaries
• Most transfer schemes imply flat benefit amounts that do not reflect the actual (differentiated) effects of energy prices on different households
• Existing transfer schemes have inflexible eligibility determination mechanisms that do not allow rapid scale up
• There is overlap or lack of coordination across different programs and actors involved
• Existing programs do not have clear graduation strategy for beneficiaries through linkages to employment-creating fear of “dependency”
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Main challenge : inflexible SSN with low
coverage and low adequacy
It is possible to set up a new safety net cash transfer program fillinggaps in a matter of months
• Indonesia BLT, Dominican republic, Ukraine HUS
It is possible to use the existing safety net, make it more flexible,adequate, accessible or consolidate programs
• Ukraine new HUS benefit, Armenia Family Poverty Benefit,Brazil Auxilio Gas/ Bolsa Familia
Sometimes it is possible to re-target the subsidies themselves,integrating it with SSNs, using of technological innovations
• Malaysia smart cards, Egypt smart cards
Systemic approach to SSN allows combining targetedpro-poor SSNs and measures aimed at “vulnerable”
• Improved, expanded and better targeted employmentprograms (Romania), or education (Dominican republic,Indonesia)
Indonesia village investment fund7
Several options to overcome the challenge:
August 04
October 04
December 04
March05
Dec 05
October 05
Step 1
Determining the Magnitude of the Problem
Step 2 Fuel Pricing Strategy
Step 3 Suggesting Reallocation Programs
July 2005
Step 4 Design the Compensation Program (UCT)
Step 5 Support on Monitoring and Evaluation of Programs
Step 6 CCT Piloting Support
1st Price Hike
Reallocation Programs in Education, Health Rural Infrastructure Rolled Out
2nd Price Hike Kerosene Price Tripled
Unconditional Cash Transfer (UCT) Rolled Out 1st tranche of 4 UCT 2nd tranche of
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Results of Rapid Evaluation feed into 2nd tranche of UCT
Year % fuel price increase
Compensation (Rp/HH) 2005 price
Before After (t+1) (t+2) (t+3)
2005 66 % 100 16.7 17.8 16.6 15.4
2008 30 % 114 15.4 14.1 13.3 12.5
2013 44 % 89 11.4 11.5 10.5 10.1
With proper mitigation and good targeting poverty increases can be prevented
Cost of SSN compensations was a small part of the savings, but sufficient to protect the poor and vulnerable and ensure modernization of SSN
In 2005 – reduction of subsidies by 2 % of GDP, cost of compensations 0.8% of GDP, but only temporary cash transfer (over 4 quarters)
In 2008 – all subsidy reform savings have resulted in increasing SSN financing
In 2013: subsidy reform helped to save 0.4% of GDP , and the total compensation package amounted to 0.3% of GDP, but just 8% of this went to support expansion of SSN, the rest went to other social policy measures
2014: new reform – and launch of new productive family programs consolidating 4 SSN schemes (health, stipends, financial services, microcredit and employment)
• Introduced large temporary cash transfer program (BLT) covering one-third of
households building on existing social safety net programs; it was used in 2005, 2008
and 2013. The program tested the use of smart cards introduced later in all SSNs.
• By 2012 it developed (after first attempt in 2005) a comprehensive register
• Introduced innovative CCT program (PKH) and expanded in to 3 mln HH (currently
scaling it up to 6 mln currently and by 2018 to 12 mln)
• Is currently reforming inefficient food subsidy program (RASKIN) with the Smart card
mechanism
• Reallocated some budgetary savings to education, health, and infrastructure
programs benefitting broader population. Promoted education access by introducing
stipend for poor students (BSM) and health by expansion of health insurance scheme
(Jankesmas) to the poor.
• In 2014 introduced new social security scheme to ensure 100% coverage of the
informal sector
• In 2014 launched a new Productive Family program.
• Initiated program to reduce kerosene use by increasing LPG use
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Indonesia: summary of steps to strengthen SSNs
Energy pricing reforms in Ukraine
• The Government significantly increased gas (450%) and heating (70%) tariffs for households as of April 1, 2015
• The Government simplified social assistance mechanisms in February and March, 2015o the Government consolidated various rebates on utilities for special groups and New
Compensation Program with an expanded, simplified Housing and Utilities Subsidies (HUS) program; HUS administration was improved, and full retraining of 3000 welfare officers was conducted.
o The main outcome of these reforms was a transformation of SSN from old-fashioned small programs serving fixed group of clients to modern flexible programs with clear business process and service standards, and change in interaction with citizens
• The Government approved Gas Sector Reform Implementation Plan on March 25, 2015; energy tariff increases, strengthening of social assistance mechanisms and nation-wide public information campaign on energy and subsidies reforms are essential parts of the Plan o The Plan was developed by the Ministry of Energy, Ministry of Social Protection, Energy
Regulator (with inputs from the Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Regional Development, Antimonopoly Committee and Geological Service), together with the Bank team and in consultations with EC and Energy Community Secretariat
• Media coverage of the reform improved o In the regions where media training have been conducted, the quality of reporting on energy
reforms improved; resulted coverage: ~14 million Ukrainian adults (>30% of population)
5/9/2018
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Gas and electricity prices reform in Dominican Republic
• The new Government elected in 2008 adopted a comprehensive reform strategyo Both electricity and LPG subsidies were reformed, in the case of LPG both the HH and transport sector
were included in compensation schemes
• The Government used the momentum to build key building blocks of the modern
SSNo Solidaridad, CCT scheme existed before the reform, but operated on a small scale. New
registry , SIUBEN was compiled containing data on 60% of the household sin the country.
SIUBEN was built base don the census, but quickly moved to an open on-demand
registration procedure. It has started provided data for targeting 6 other SSN programs (in
nutrition, food subsidies and education). The payment system in Solidaridad was using
modern backoffice functions backed by Visa. Food subsidies moved also to the use of
smart cards. There was a full coverage of the poor achieved, and complete compensation
to the bottom 40%, resulting a a progressive change in the distribution.
• The reform of electricity subsidies was more difficult to implement. o The plan gradually replaced poorly targeted tariff rebates by the targeted subsidy using
SIUBEN starting in 2009. Both were costly and ineffective - 1% of GDP
• Compensation to a powerful interest groups that opposed the reform (drivers using
LPG) allowed the reform to become politically feasible
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Dominican republic: reform to LPG and electricity prices tied with building a registry and developing system of transfers (CCT and compensations), providing a package of support to households, focus on improving governance and robust procedures. Coverage of the poor increased from 5 percent to full coverage of all poor and vulnerable. Total savings from LPG subsidy removal were 0.5 of GDP. SSN measures accounted for 0.13% of GDP
Ukraine: 400% hike in the price of gas and electricity tariff increases. Reform of the social assistance and housing subsidies. Dramatic simplification of administrative procedures (developed with SA Ministry and regional authorities), harmonization and unification of various small SSN schemes, reform of business processes, massive outreach campaign, adequate financing of the new safety nets, increase in coverage from 1/3 of all poor to over 60% of poor and vulnerable. Savings from reducing gas subsidies amounted to 4% of GDP. SSN modernization and expansion package resulted in expansion of spending on targeted SSN from 0.33% to 0.6% of GDP, and largely prevented increase in poverty.
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SSN modernization and improved efficiency in
the context of reforms
• Phasing out subsidies and replacing them with direct transfers can work.
• The package of measures should go beyond price/compensation logic and develop strategy to invest in modern social safety nets.
• Readiness assessment to inform reform is an indispensable tool
• Road ahead: modern delivery systems.
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Key Lessons from International Experience
ESMAP Goal
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✓ Facility co-led by the Energy and Extractives and Macroeconomics & Fiscal Management Global Practices
• Involves staff from other Global Practices in program delivery
✓Works through
• Analytics
• Technical Assistance
• Knowledge Sharing
• Global Advocacy
• Diagnostic toolkit covering analytical
methods, questionnaires, terms of
reference, examples of past work.
• Comprehensive assessments answer
a core set of policy-relevant questions
that arise in the context of Energy
Subsidy Reform
1. Identifying and estimating
the value and fiscal cost of
subsidies
2. Assessing the incidence of
subsidies, and distributional
impact of reform and
compensation options
3. Modeling macroeconomic
and growth effects and
impacts on industrial
competitiveness
4. Assessing local and global
environmental externalities
of subsidies
5. Political economy of reform
and public communications16
5/9/20
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TAG 2017
Thank you!
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